Impact Creation 2025: Support Emerging Theatre Creators

This year’s Impact Creation campaign gives you the chance to create tailored opportunities for emerging artists through our Young Creators Unit and Queer Reading Series! With our matching donors, your impact will be doubled!




Emerging artists represent the future of theatre – bringing fresh perspectives and innovative ideas that have the power to shape the cultural landscape. However, emerging artists often face financial and systemic barriers that limit their opportunities. Knowing where to start and how to access development opportunities, create a professional network, and gain visibility can be an overwhelming challenge for early career artists in a competitive industry.

When we reduce barriers for emerging artists, they are able to: 

  • push the boundaries of traditional theatre creation;
  • amplify their voices and cultural perspectives;
  • build their artistic community and find their collaborators  

By donating, you can help emerging theatre creators access bespoke mentorships, artistic and professional development resources, including dramaturgical collaborations, workshops, and presentation opportunities, and a network that will help them to build skills towards sustaining their careers.


Your donation is especially urgent this year: Due to a change in funding priorities, PWM did not receive an anticipated supplemental grant for our Young Creators Unit and Queer Reading Series for 2025. We need your help to maintain the level of collaboration and development that the emerging artists in these programs have benefited from in past years.  Perhaps now more than ever, the need to provide emerging artists with resources and development opportunities to hone their craft to tell their stories is vital. 

That is why all proceeds of this year’s Impact Creation campaign will go toward supporting emerging artists and their projects. For more than 11 years, the Young Creators Unit and the Queer Reading Series have proven to be a successful first step in an emerging artist’s career as a theatre creator, with many projects going on to be produced or further developed.

Our goal is to raise $8,000 by December 31st, 2025. Whether it’s becoming a monthly donor or giving a one-time donation, every dollar you give helps us decrease barriers, facilitate tailored opportunities, and offer artistic expertise to emerging creators to help them thrive. 

YOUR IMPACT WILL BE DOUBLED THIS SEASON!

This year, Chris Black and Paul Butler will match donations up to $500, and PWM’s Board President Jason Poirier Lavoie and other matching donors will match donations up to $500, for a generous total of $1000! That means if you donate $35, you’ll provide 2 hours of mentorship for an emerging artist instead of one.



This year, we’ve decided to thank our incredible donors for their ongoing support by sending them a copy of the first-ever PWM Recipe Book. Filled with recipes contributed by members of the PWM community — from staff and board members to artists past and present – it’s an acknowledgement of the importance of your contribution to artistic development. What better way to acknowledge one process of creation than with another!

Everyone who donates to the 2025 Impact Creation campaign will receive a PDF copy of this cookbook as recognition of our gratitude. Donate today to get your copy of this unique celebration of the people who make PWM what it is!

Thank you for your support in helping emerging works come to life.



Banner photo credits, top to bottom, left to right: Tiernan Cornford, Fatma Sarah Elkashef, Scout Rexe, Madeleine Scovil, Annie Valentina, and Emily Soussana in a workshop of Cult Play. Exploring Practice workshop with Burcu Emeç. A view of Gros Morne National Park. Talkback at the 2025 Queer Reading Series. Albert Kwan, Jeremy Lewis, Jean Bui, Jeff Ho, Pierre Poussin, and Mike Payette at a workshop of Cockroach by Jeff Ho. S.E. Grummett (Grumms) in a residency of Nude Parade. Lois Brown during a DDIS workshop of Invisible Me. Audience members at the 2025 YCU Showcase. Applied Silence in the PWM Studio for a residency. David Noël, Trevor Barrette, and Fatma Sarah Elkashef in a workshop of Max and Aaron Write a Musical. Huirui Zhang, Joy Ross-Jones, Hwaan Han, and Galina Zhu in a YCU Mentorship of Lit My Ash by Huirui Zhang. Actors in a reading of After the Orgy by Kay Komizara during the 2022 YCU Showcase. Sami Hilvo and Alexis Diamond at the 2025 Glassco Translation Residency in Tadoussac.

Impact Creation 2024: Celebrating Creativity & Community

A collage of 10 square photos of various artists in various PWM programs.

At Playwrights’ Workshop Montréal, theatre creators are able to boldly explore their work – take risks, fail, and try again –  in order to bring innovative new works to audiences across the country. We understand the power of theatre to reflect and impact society, to amplify the voices of underrepresented communities, and to bring unique stories to light. 

We also know that the creative process needs time, space, and the support of a community. Shared effort from friends, colleagues, and collaborators is what allows theatre to flourish. We need your help to continue removing barriers, facilitating programs, and offering dramaturgical collaboration to make creators’ visions a reality. Every one of us has a part in this process. 

To help us continue to offer essential support to theatre creators, particularly those from underrepresented communities, allowing them to develop their craft and create work that innovates and inspires audiences across Canada, we invite you to support our end-of-year fundraising campaign, Impact Creation. Our goal is to reach $6000.00 in donations by December 31st: Every donation strengthens our ability to assist artists at each step of their journey.

365 CREATORS CLUB:
YOUR IMPACT WILL BE DOUBLED THIS DECEMBER!

Monthly donations help us respond to emerging project needs—a vital resource for artists. This December only, Chris Black and Paul Butler and the PWM Board of Directors have generously offered to match first-time monthly donations! And for those of you already donating monthly, please consider increasing your contribution: Newly increased monthly contribution amounts will also be matched in full for the duration of Impact Creation 2024! (For example, if you currently donate $15/month and increase your monthly donation to $18 in December, this will mean PWM will receive $36!). 

*New and increased monthly donations will be matched up to a total of $700 this December only; $250 in matches pledged by Chris Black and Paul Butler, and $450 from the PWM Board of Directors.

Why Stefanie Buxton, Actor and Playwright, Gives Monthly:

With a gift of $18 or more each month, you’ll receive a special gift of a published play* developed in collaboration with PWM, autographed by the playwright!

*Selection varies. Examples include Jabber by Marcus Youssef, Squawk by Megan Gail Coles, Instant by Erin Shields, Andy’s Gone by Marie-Claude Verdier and translated by Alexis Diamond, and Everybody Just C@lm The F#ck Down by Robert Chafe. This year, cockroach (曱甴) by Ho Ka Kei (Jeff Ho) will be added to the selection.




Each year, your donations support new theatre creation through:
– 30 play development workshops, where everyone is compensated for their contributions;
– 75 one-on-one dramaturgical consultations, including digital dramaturgy clinics, offered free of charge;
– 20 mentorships that connect artists with industry professionals;
– 2 national residencies where all travel, accommodations, and meals are provided;
– 4 professional development workshops for the artistic community to learn or hone new skills;
– Ongoing initiatives to strengthen accessibility and inclusion;
– And much more!


Whether you’d like to make a one-time contribution, or if you’d like to join our 365 Creators Club of monthly donors, your support is invaluable.

OUR INTERCONNECTED COMMUNITY CROSSWORD PUZZLE

Finally, PWM’s fundraiser has a tradition of celebrating the past year’s collaborations and achievements in the form of a crossword puzzle. You are sure to recognize plays and people in this puzzle, and if you don’t know an answer, that’s okay: we encourage you to look things up–It’s a chance to get to know your community even better!

Every correctly completed puzzle is entered into a draw, giving you the chance to win your choice of a published play developed in collaboration with PWM! Submit by December 31, 2024 for your chance to win! 

You can fill in the puzzle, print it out or take a screenshot, and email a picture of the completed puzzle to heather@playwrights.ca. 

Keep an eye on our social media in the month of December for some direct clues and answers!

Made by Playwrights’ Workshop Montréal with the online cross word maker from Amuse Labs


Thank you for being part of this community: Your support means the world to us and to those creating new worlds through their art.




Banner photo credits, top row, left to right: Jordan Arseneault, Eric Noël, and Maureen Labonté during the 2016 Cole Mentorship for Emerging Translators program; Joy Ross-Jones in a workshop of زبون (tongue) by Panthea Vatandoost; Nick Carpenter and Aki Matsushita (2023 Cross Cultural Adaptation Lab); Symantha Stewart and Charity Adzie in Young Creators Unit Showcase reading of A Boy’s Love by Anton May; View of the Bonne Bay Aquarium and Research Station in Newfoundland and Labrador during the 2024 Gros Morne Playwrights’ Residency; Yvette Nolan and Todd Houseman in a workshop of Jordan by Yvette Nolan.
Banner photo credits, bottom row, left to right: Symantha Stewart and Ravyn R. Bekh in a workshop of the 2024 Queer Reading Series piece It Sticks to the Ryver by Corbeau Sandoval; Joy Ross-Jones, Cara Rebecca, Diana Uribe, Aladeen Tawfeek, Leslie Baker, Aki Matsushita, and Amelia Scott in a workshop of Fix by Joy Ross-Jones; Danielle Le Saux-Farmer, Aki Matsushita, Evelyne de la Chenelière, and Olivier Choinière at the 2024 Glassco Translation Residency in Tadoussac; The Fornés Workshop with Mariló Nuñez (2023 Exploring Practice workshop); Audience members attending the 2023 Young Creators Unit Showcase; Mathilde Perahia, Tiernan Cornford, Camila Ariza, and Sophie Gee in a workshop of Ülfet Sevdi’s Performing Motherhood (2023-2024 PWM + MAI Joint Support for Artists).

AMPLIFIER 2025-2027

A colourful background made up of salmon pink, royal blue, and turquoise blue blocks. At the bottom left corner, a five white lines of varying length. At the top center, the word Amplifier is written in royal blue, all capital letters. At the bottom right, the words Call For Applications are written in white

CALL FOR APPLICATIONS

Playwrights’ Workshop Montréal (PWM), LA SERRE – arts vivants (LA SERRE) and the Conseil des Arts de Montréal (CAM) are currently accepting applications for the 2025-2027 English-language edition of AMPLIFIER.

The deadline to submit applications is October 23, 2024 at 11:59PM EST.

If you have any questions regarding accessibility, require assistance with your application, and/or would like to discuss alternative methods of applying, please contact accessibility@playwrights.ca. 

If you have any questions regarding this program, your application, or the eligibility of your project, please contact our Artistic Producer, Leila Ghaemi, at leila@playwrights.ca with the subject line: AMPLIFIER

AMPLIFIER offers a long-term exploratory creation process to a playwright who identifies as Indigenous (First Nations, Métis, and Inuit), Black, POC, racialized, including 1st or 2nd generation immigrant artists (as defined in the Conseil des Arts de Montréal’s glossary), working creatively in one of Canada’s official languages. This program offers artistic and financial support to one working* playwright residing on the island of Montréal, including dramaturgical collaboration, a professional workshop with actors, and a residency leading to a presentation to programmers and peers.

AMPLIFIER seeks to foster dialogue between Montréal’s English and French speaking theatre communities, as well as intercultural exchanges and greater representation for culturally diverse artists within the theatre community and on Montréal’s stages.

In order to support artists creating in French and artists creating in English, CAM and La Serre offer this program alternately with the Centre des auteurs dramatiques (CEAD) in French (Résidence Voix Théâtrales), and with PWM in English. The 2025-2027 edition is intended for artists working in the English language. PWM supports English language minority artists in Quebec, therefore the work with PWM will take place in English. Applications are to be submitted in English.

Please refer to the Program Presentation (PDF) for more details about what this partnership includes, program eligibility criteria, and other conditions.

THE SUPPORTING ORGANIZATIONS

PWM logo

CONSEIL DES ARTS DE MONTRÉAL 

Founded in 1956, the Conseil des arts de Montréal identifies, supports and recognizes excellence in the professional creation, production and dissemination of the arts.

To remain in tune with the organizations and collectives it serves, the Conseil relies on its knowledge of the communities, its innovative skills, and its ability to bring the city’s artists and financial partners together.

PLAYWRIGHTS’ WORKSHOP MONTRÉAL 

Founded in 1963, Playwrights’ Workshop Montréal (PWM) is a nationally-mandated theatre creation and development centre based in Montréal. PWM is led by a team of experienced dramaturgs and arts administrators. With a focus on dramaturgy, its mission is to collaborate with artists in the development of new works of theatre and performance. PWM gives artists the opportunity to create and experiment, dream and take risks. Its collaborative process draws on the team’s unique experience and is tailored to the artist’s individual needs. 

At PWM, playwrights, dramaturgs, translators, directors, performance makers, and theatre companies across the country find a creative collaborator willing to invest deeply in the development of meaningful work. PWM acts as a community hub for theatre-makers in Montreal and beyond.

PWM operates a 2,000 square foot creation studio and shared office space, equipped with theatre lighting, sound and digital equipment. Click here for accessibility information for our office and creative studio space: https://www.playwrights.ca/accessibility-contact/

LA SERRE – ARTS VIVANTS

LA SERRE is a structuring incubator that supports emerging artists in the development and establishment of their artistic practices. It offers initiatives conducive to their visibility; takes care of its community, and offers inspiring spaces. LA SERRE supports emerging artists by creating lasting and invested connections with them. It enables artists to create and share performances that shift the perspectives of spectators and explore new ways of being together. The practices supported by LA SERRE question, transform and resist preconceptions, let pluralities unfold, and contribute to the renewal of established models. LA SERRE activates collaborations between artists, citizens, fields of knowledge, and artistic disciplines. Its support is experimental and multifaceted.

SUPPORT PROVIDED

The 2025-2027 AMPLIFIER artist will receive a project creation grant of $13,000 from the CAM over two years, along with numerous support provided by PWM, LA SERRE, and CAM. This is a one-time, non-renewable grant.

The program takes place over two years, and support is provided as follows:

YEAR 1

$3,000 creation grant for a new theatrical creation

30 hours of dramaturgical collaboration with Playwrights’ Workshop Montréal

A 9 hour workshop with actors with Playwrights’ Workshop Montréal

A reading presentation with actors at Playwrights’ Workshop Montréal

YEAR 2

$10,000 creation grant for production

50 hours of production and management mentorship by LA SERRE–arts vivants

60 hours of free access to the Conseil des Arts de Montréal’s studios

Presentation of two performances in lab format

One-year subscription to Machinerie des arts.

APPLICATION PROCESS

To apply, please complete the online application form. Click here to view the form as a PDF. During the application process, you will be asked to include the following documents in PDF format:

  • A CV;
  • An excerpt of the current project (12 pages maximum);
  • A full script of a previously written theatrical work in English

Applications will be evaluated by representatives of the CAM, PWM, and La Serre. Projects will be evaluated based on merit, feasibility, and impact on the artist.

PWM welcomes all applications from eligible playwrights: Indigenous (First Nations, Métis, and Inuit), Black, POC, racialized (including recent immigrants). While recognizing that the identity of each person is fundamentally plural, and multidimensional, we strongly encourage applications from artists who meet the above criteria and are also: 2SLGBTQQIPAA+, neurodivergent, disabled, living with chronic illness and/or chronic pain. PWM is strongly committed to supporting a wide range of cultural identities and lived experiences, therefore we encourage applicants to self-identify in their application if they are comfortable doing so.

The deadline to submit applications is October 23, 2024 at 11:59PM EST.


 * This is an opportunity for professional playwrights as defined in the Conseil de Arts de Montreal glossary: “An individual with a professional artistic practice who possesses the necessary experience and knowledge to develop this practice. This includes self-taught individuals as well as those who have studied art. This person is recognized in their artistic community (artists working in the same artistic tradition), creates, carries out or publishes works of art, is dedicated to their artistic practice and is generally paid for their work.”

Playwrights’ Workshop Montréal Welcomes New Managing Director Alanna Wrenshall


PWM is delighted to formally announce that our Board of Directors and hiring committee have appointed Alanna Wrenshall, more commonly known as Alan, as our new Managing Director.

Alan Wrenshall is a Queer, neurodivergent Arts Administrator and former Stage Manager. Born and raised in Robinson-Huron Treaty territory and the traditional territory of the Atikameksheng Anishnawbek, they graduated from Queen’s University with honours and began working behind the scenes at many theatres in Ontario including 4th Line Theatre, the Port Hope Capitol Theatre, and the Sudbury Theatre Centre. After a whirlwind move to Tio’tia:ke/Montreal in 2023, they joined PWM’s administration team, where they have had the opportunity to witness the vibrancy of Montreal’s theatre community. Their favourite kind of plant is all of them, and they can often be found trying to keep their dog, Boomer, out of the garden.

Alan was appointed to the position earlier this year following the departure of former Managing Director Anne-Sophie Grenier in 2023. With Alan’s background of hands-on theatre leadership and their time working within PWM’s administrative team, we’re eager to see the impact they will bring to the organization and the Montréal theatre community.

“Alan, who has served as our general manager prior to this appointment, brings a wealth of experience and a proven track record to their new role. Their understanding of the theatre industry, combined with a commitment to our mission of supporting dramaturgy, makes them uniquely qualified to lead our organization.

Please join me in congratulating Alan on their well-deserved appointment; I look forward to their continued contributions and to the future of Playwrights’ Workshop Montréal under their leadership.”

– Jason Poirier Lavoie, President of the Board of Directors at PWM

Playwrights' Workshop Montréal Board of Director_Jason Poirier Lavoie

After a year of transitions and adaptations following the  pandemic, we look hopefully to the future of our organization under the new co-leadership team of Sarah and Alan. This new chapter will yield fruitful collaborations and creative processes that we are excited to realize!

Playwrights' Workshop Montreal Artistic Director Fatma Sarah Elkashef.

“I am very excited to finally formally welcome Alan to PWM as the MD. Since the departure of former MD, Anne-Sophie Grenier, Alan has grown from their former position on the PWM team and flourished into the responsibilities of the MD role. They are a brilliant leader and partner and I am thrilled to be co-leading PWM into its next phase with them.”

– Fatma Sarah Elkashef, Artistic Director of PWM

“I am so thrilled, and honoured, to be representing PWM as the Managing Director. Having joined the Admin team last February, I have had the opportunity to learn so much about Montreal’s incredible community, and the invaluable support PWM provides to the artists we work with. For the past few months I have had the opportunity to bring my experience and love of theatre to the position of MD. I am very grateful to my co-leader, Sarah, and the entire PWM team for their hard work and dedication. I look forward to building on the strong foundation we have and continuing to foster vibrant and supportive environments for all artists.” 

– Alanna Wrenshall, Managing Director of PWM

A PDF of this announcement can be found here:

PWM+MAI Joint Support for Artists Featuring Ülfet Sevdi


Playwrights’ Workshop Montréal and the MAI (Montréal, Arts Interculturels) are thrilled to announce that the PWM + MAI  Joint Support for Artists will feature Ülfet Sevdi and her work Motherhood.

The Artist

Ülfet Sevdi is a writer, theatre director, dramaturge, visual artist, and Theatre of the Oppressed practitioner based in Montreal.


She graduated in Fine Arts and Theatre in Türkiye in 2001. She holds a Research and Creation Master in the INDI program at Concordia University. She is now a PhD candidate in the INDI program at Concordia University. Her work deals with oral history and social narratives. Her approach is highly conceptual, experimental, and is theoretically grounded in the critical social sciences.


She was the co-founder and artistic director of nü.kolektif (2008-2014), an Istanbul-based collective of multidisciplinary artists involved in performances dealing with political topics. She continues this line of work with Thought Experiment Productions (2015-) since coming to Montreal, a production company she also co-founded and that she co-directs.


Her past work has been funded by the Canada Council for the Arts, the Montreal Council for the Arts, and the Cole Foundation. It has been presented in Brazil, Canada, Colombia, Denmark, Ireland, Türkiye, and the USA.

THE PROJECT

In the moment of my artistic and academic mid-career, less than two years ago, I have become a mother. I had just finished a Master thesis. It was still during the Covid pandemic. They say having a child changes your life. But you do not understand it until it happens to you. It is a deep, highly rewarding but also very demanding existential state.

How do we continue, what can be done? When will we be able to regain our normal artistic life? Our performer’s body? Our capacity to focus on reading and writing? After almost a year of pregnancy follow the first months, the first year. The body has changed; constraints –physical, emotional, psychological- are everywhere. Time flows outside, life continues.

But the artist-mother cannot keep up with all the ideas she has, cannot return to her practice. Even if she does, part of her is with the baby. You are stuck, in the physical and psychological senses of the term. You lost the freedom needed to create, both outside and inside. You lost the physical, psychological and time-related flexibility needed to create and go on stage to perform. You have to make peace with this new body. You have to find ways to understand how you can continue. As an artist, your financial well-being depends on your performance practice. You could use daycares, babysitters, but they cost money… to make money you need more money. Having a baby costs money, new needs are involved. If the system offers something, is it really enough? Is the father able to make it alone? And when you don’t have the traditional family support… To create you need time and space, to perform as well. Without time you can’t develop your ideas. Without time to create, you have nothing to perform. The experience is opening layers over layers of difficulties: the systemic, the psychological and the physical. Many different paradoxical vicious circles open up in front of you. And you’re exhausted.

This performance will be based around the technique I have developed in my last performance, Numbers Increase As We Count…, a technique I have called “Performative Acting”. It is a technique that involves specific tasks as well as dramaturgically framed open structures. I have sketched the framework for this technique in my Research and Creation Master Thesis in the INDI program, and am currently developing it further in my current PDH studies in the same program. For this project, I intend to carry this work with different artist- mothers/mother-artists from different performative artistic disciplines.

THE PROGRAM

The PWM + MAI joint support accompanies creators on their journey to develop a project and explore their practice. It is aimed at artists encountering structural and systemic obstacles to their full participation in the arts because of their claimed identity and/or perceived identity in society. 

More details about the program available here.

We are so excited to support the development of Ülfet’s project, and wish her a fulfilling creation process!

This program is a partnership between
PWM logo
Project supported by the Government of QuébEc as part of l’Entente sur le Développement Culturel and the City of Montreal, and by the Canada Council for the Arts
Canada Council logo

IMPACT CREATION: 60 YEARS OF EXPLORATION

Celebrate the past six decades at PWM, and support the next generations of theatre creators!

As PWM’s 60th anniversary year comes to a close, we invite you to reflect on our rich history as collaborators and as a national hub for the theatre community, and support our programming by making a donation to our Impact Creation fundraiser.  

Our organization values the creative process first and foremost, and strives to foster an environment that allows artists to thrive. PWM is a space for theatre creators of all experience levels to connect, collaborate and advance their work. Donating to us is an investment in the future vitality of our artistic communities, in Montreal and across the country: Here’s to another 60 years of exploration ahead! 

Each year, your donations support new theatre creation through: 

  • 25-30 play development workshops, where everyone in the room (playwrights, dramaturgs,  translators, actors, directors and so on) is paid
  • 50-75 one-on-one dramaturgical consultations, including digital dramaturgy clinics, offered to writers and theatre-makers free of charge
  • 20 mentorships that connect early career artists with established industry professionals at no cost to the artists
  • 2 national residencies where playwrights and translators are paid an honorarium, and all travel, accommodation, and meals are provided by PWM
  • 4 professional development workshops for theatre creators, offered free of charge through our Exploring Practice series
  • Ongoing commitment and initiatives to strengthen accessibility and inclusion for theatre creators and theatre creation 
  • And much more!

Help us reach our goal of $6000 by the end of 2023 by donating today.

Giving Throughout the Year

Did you know that monthly donations allow PWM’s work to be more responsive to the ever-changing  needs of projects and artists by providing us with steady income we know we can count on? As an added bonus, donors who give $15 or more per month for one year receive the gift of a published play developed in collaboration with PWM, autographed by the playwright

Our Interconnected Community Crossword

Carol Libman, co-founder, speaking in regard to the 25th anniversary of PWM in 1988

Are you a PWM history buff? To honour our 60th anniversary, this year’s Interconnected Community crossword puzzle includes more people and plays of PWM past – and some solutions can be found on our History page

You can fill in the puzzle and “SUBMIT” through the app above, or you can print it out and email a picture of the completed puzzle to heather@playwrights.ca.

Every correctly completed puzzle is entered into a draw, giving you the chance to win your choice of one of the following published plays developed in collaboration with PWM! Be sure to give it a close look over, and enter your contact information, as you can only submit once. But don’t worry! If you leave and come back, your progress will be saved on this page. Submit by December 31, 2023 for your chance to win! 

Keep an eye on our social media in the month of December for some direct clues and answers!

Controlled Damage by Andrea ScottOkinum by Émilie Monnet (original in French, or English translation) Some Blow Flutes by Mary VingoeThe Law of Gravity by Olivier Sylvestre and translated by Bobby TheodoreAndy’s Gone by Marie-Claude Verdier and translated by Alexis DiamondThe Enchanted Loom by Suvendrini Lena and translated by Dushy GnanapragasamEverybody Just C@lm the F#ck Down by Robert ChafeSimone, Half and Half by Christine Rodriguez • Reaching for Starlight by Donna-Michelle St. Bernard


Your support is vital to the work we do, and we hope you can play a key part in creating new works for theatre by helping us reach our goal of $6000 by the end of 2023. Anything you can give is greatly appreciated: All donations, big and small, make this work possible. If you cannot donate at this time, consider being a PWM ambassador and spread the word about Impact Creation! Playwriting and theatre creation take a great deal of work and a lot of resources, but we know it is worth every bit of effort, and we also know the importance of celebrating and supporting the community! Thank you so much for helping us build a beautiful future for theatre.


PWM’s Impact According to:

Accessibility Tools
English (Canada)
Skip to content